> For example, <xml>@</xml> is valid XML and just contains the
> character @. Swish-e (or probably the XML2 parser) breaks down when
> it encounters this character sequence, even though it is perfectly
> legal.
What's actually happending? Seems to work correctly - "@" is a
non-wordcharacter.
--
Bill Moseley
moseley@hank.org
Unsubscribe from or help with the swish-e list:
http://swish-e.org/Discussion/
Help with Swish-e:
http://swish-e.org/current/docs
swish-e@sunsite.berkeley.edu
Received on Wed Jul 28 11:00:18 2004